SAIF Corp. v. Johnson

781 P.2d 374, 99 Or. App. 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 25, 1989
Docket88C-11692; CA A60685
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 781 P.2d 374 (SAIF Corp. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SAIF Corp. v. Johnson, 781 P.2d 374, 99 Or. App. 64 (Or. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

*66 RICHARDSON, P. J.

SAIF Corporation appeals from a judgment for the defendant Workers’ Compensation referee in this mandamus action by which SAIF seeks to have defendant compelled to vacate his order on a claim. The trial court concluded that exclusive jurisdiction to review defendant’s order is provided in the Workers’ Compensation Law and that the availability of that review provides SAIF with an adequate alternative remedy and therefore makes mandamus unavailable. The court entered a judgment dismissing the alternative writ. We affirm.

The claimant had requested review of four determination orders that were issued between 1984 and 1986. Those requests were dismissed in September, 1987, on the claimant’s motion. In February, 1988, another determination order concerning the same claimant was issued. He requested review, and a hearing was conducted by defendant. According to SAIF’s petition,

“Defendant assumed jurisdiction over said February 17,1988 Determination Order, pursuant to ORS 656.283, and also assumed jurisdiction over the four previously mentioned dismissed Determination Orders.
“VIII.
“* * * Defendant issued an Opinion and Order on the merits of the February 17,1988 Determination Order, as well as the merits of the four previously mentioned dismissed Determination Orders, on August 16,1988.”

Defendant’s order increased the compensation that SAIF was required to pay. SAIF contends that, because there were no pending requests for hearings on the four earlier determination orders and the time allowed for requesting review of them had elapsed, defendant had no jurisdiction to rule on them.

SAIF agrees that defendant’s order is reviewable by the Workers’ Compensation Board under ORS 656.295. It contends, however, that that is not an exclusive remedy and that it is not an adequate one, because, under ORS 656.313(2), SAIF cannot recover the compensation that it must pay the claimant between the time of defendant’s order and the time that the order may be reversed by the Board or us. Defendant *67 responds that the review provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Law are exclusive and adequate. Defendant also suggests that SAIF’s inability to recover the payments made during the review process does not render the process an inadequate remedy, because the nonrecovery provision of ORS 656.313 is a component of, and not a drawback to, the process. Defendant relies on Wisherd v. Paul Koch Volkswagen, 28 Or App 513, 559 P2d 1305, rev den 278 Or 393, appeal dismissed 434 US 898 (1977), where we said:

“ORS 656.313 cannot be viewed in isolation; it must be considered as part of the entire workmen’s compensation system. The workmen’s compensation system compromises many interests of both employers and employes out of the belief that an alternative to judicial determination of employment-related injury claims is necessary. Employes must forego, inter alia, the right to sue in tort for injuries occurring in the course of employment but receive in exchange the elimination of fault as a basis for compensation. Employers receive the benefit of limited liability for compensable accidents but are required on the other hand to assume liability for a greater number of injuries. These and many other balances are among those struck in the quid pro quo format of the workmen’s compensation system * * 28 Or App at 516.

We have repeatedly held that the circuit courts lack jurisdiction to consider matters concerning workers’ compensation claims and that the decisional and review provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Law are exclusive. Hayden v. Workers’ Compensation Dept., 77 Or App 328, 713 P2d 612 (1986); SAIF v. Harris, 66 Or App 165, 672 P2d 1384 (1983); see ORS 656.018; ORS 656.704. However, we have not previously considered the exclusive jurisdiction question in the context of a mandamus proceeding, nor have we decided the other question that the parties dispute — whether the administrative and judicial review remedies provided by the Workers’ Compensation Law are an adequate alternative to and foreclose mandamus. Because the second question is independently dispositive and can be answered solely with reference to this case, we base our decision on it.

ORS 34.110 provides, in part:

“The writ shall not be issued in any case where there is a plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law.”

*68 It is clear that defendant’s order decides matters concerning a claim, that SAIF can — and has — sought Board review of the order and that the specific question that SAIF wants decided here, whether defendant exceeded his jurisdiction, can be decided by the Board in its review of the order pursuant to ORS chapter 656. The relief that SAIF seeks in this action, that defendant’s order be vacated, is the functional equivalent of relief that it could seek, for the same reason and possibly others, in the Board proceeding. SAIF does not argue that anything inherent in the two kinds of proceedings makes mandamus so much speedier than review under the Workers’ Compensation Law provisions that the latter are inadequate for that reason. Moreover, the dispatch of mandamus has generally not led the courts to hold that a direct review or appeal is an inadequate alternative, even when mandamus is sought in connection with a preliminary matter and the appeal must await a final disposition. See State ex rel Automotive Emporium v. Murchison, 289 Or 265, 611 P2d 1169, rehearing denied 289 Or 673, 616 P2d 496 (1980).

Against that background, it is far from apparent why SAIF regards the statutory review procedure as inadequate. SAIF relies on State ex rel Huntington v. Sulmonetti, 276 Or 967, 557 P2d 641 (1976), where the court reached the merits of and rejected the employer-relator’s substantive ground for seeking mandamus to require the defendant circuit court judge to vacate his order remanding a claim to the Board. The employer argued that the claim was barred by res judicata, and the Board had agreed. On direct review, the defendant disagreed and remanded “for a determination of whether claimant was in the course and scope of his employment when he sustained his accidental injury.” 276 Or at 969.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
781 P.2d 374, 99 Or. App. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saif-corp-v-johnson-orctapp-1989.